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Mini-Box M-100

Craig Mctavern submits this link to a blurb about the Mini-Box M-100 small form-factor computer. Looks tailor-made for a home audio/visual system.

16 of 189 comments (clear)

  1. Put that on a robot! by tcd004 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'd love to add one of these m-100's to one of these personal robots and have my own autonomous drink caddy.

    Of course, I'd prefer if the hardware was made by Jesus.

    Tcd004

  2. Bugger by jonathonc · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Looks like the Mini-Box online store is down even before the Slashdot Effect hits.

  3. 3 words: Car Ogg Player by mhesseltine · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This would be ideal. It has an LCD display, programmable keypad, and does floating point, so Ogg is possible.

    Now all I need is a job and some $$$ :(

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  4. Openbrick anyone ? by theefer · · Score: 4, Interesting

    How is it different from the OpenBrick ? Mh this mini-box seems to run a 800 Mhz x86 processor (OpenBrick has a 300 Mhz Geode processor). I heard the OpenBrick could not play DivX smoothly, maybe this is the solution ?

    Sounds interesting, has anyone gotten one already ?

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    theefer
    1. Re:Openbrick anyone ? by xtra · · Score: 2, Interesting

      but only if you are using windows

      hardware acceleration is not (yet) supported under linux

  5. Good but... by Valiss · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The main lure for me is the size. I mean that thing is tiny! For some special project or around the house type things (i.e. an mp3 player for the front room) it could be useful. BUT, the $495.95 definately would make me thing twice about buying this over another (barebones-esque)system. Would the savings in my electric bill cause this to pay for itself over time?

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    -Valiss
  6. Car Computer. by Hodr · · Score: 4, Interesting

    A friend of mine has been researching small computers for his car. He wants to run an mp3 jukebox application as well as control a scrollbar in the back window (for when you would like to express yourself to those driving to close behind you).

    This computer would seem to fir the bill perfectly, now we just need to find a nice cheap source for a 8x3 inch or so lcd display for the dash.

    1. Re:Car Computer. by tfriedlich · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Why not just use a Zaurus? Throw a 1GB IBM Microdrive in the CF slot and a wifi card in the SD slot and transfer files from your home system wirelessly to the car when you pull in to the garage. Ok, prbly not the best use of technology, but I am just loving my new Zaurus.

  7. Re:Car Stereo? by applef00 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Totally. This would fit nicely into my Camaro's DIN slot. If anyone would like to buy it for me, I'll be happy to pay you back with a harrowing thrill ride, accompanied by any music you'd like.

  8. home network storage by Adler · · Score: 2, Interesting

    a box this size, and silence and low power use would be great for home network storage. just what i've been looking for, for sometime now. now if it was just $300 cheaper. seriously, why isnt there a cheap HD in a box that oen can use for home netowrk storage, at these prices for $500 i can get a huge new HD setup and my problems would be solved, but for a small networked HD with like a web interface, i'd sell my soul. anyoen seen somethign liek that? for around $200 ? anybody?

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  9. Re:Obligatory by uberdave · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Don't forget the ever popular "Imagine a beowolf cluster..." Hey, that might not be such a bad idea. At a rough guess, eighteen of these fit in the same space as a mid sized tower.

  10. Router by Dante · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I wonder why no-ones talked about using this as a router? My biggest problem with a regular pc is size noise, and power consumtion. price would be the limiting factor no?

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    "think of it as evolution in action"
  11. Re:Obligatory by luzrek · · Score: 2, Interesting
    assuming the volume of a "standard" beige box PC is the same as mine, we could probably get about 20 of these into the same volume. This would end up drawing about 120 watts of power, but if we assume that each processor is equivalent to about a 300 Mhz Intel machine (pessamistic estimate since that is less than 50% efficiency and the EPIA-M is actually a well integrated MB) it would have about twice the processing power of a 3Ghz Intel machine. This ends up being much more efficient power wise than the equivalent Intel solution (by about a factor of 2).

    Cost wise, the EPIA-M MB's are actually pretty good since they can do the boot-off network thing so you only need one harddrive. You will need to buy a lot of RAM though. The total cost would probably end up pretty close to 4000$, much less efficent than a single processor/motherboard computer.

    You'ld also be able to drive about 20 monitors off of the cluster of EPIA's. Try building that into a single board computer, I bet it costs more. Really though, who needs to drive 20 monitors?

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    Galium Arsenide is the material of the future, and always will be.

  12. Along the same lines - Hush Mini-ITX by henele · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Which you can check out here.

    It comes with a hard drive, and uses the 933Mhz Epia solution without needing a fan. Granted, the case gets a little warm (as the whole thing effectively acts as a heatsink), but that doesn't stop it from being very cool :)

    For a review of the gold version, click here.

  13. get a better tailor, it doesn't fit by frovingslosh · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Looks tailor-made for a home audio/visual system.

    Hardly. At $500 for a tiny box that can't even hold a CD or DVD drive, and extremely restricts what else you can do with it, it seem a very expensive tiny toy.

    For not much more you can get a decent laptop, which would include a DVD drive/cd writer, an LCD display, hard drive, TV out and all the rest and take up about the same amount of space while the laptop is closed. Or just get a much less expensive small desktop system or put together your own.

    There might be some valid use for this little thing at that price, but only in very specific dedicated applications, and certainly not for a home audio/visual system.

    --
    I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
  14. Forget it with Linux by subStance · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I have exactly this motherboard (EPIA-M series), and have been trying to run linux on it as a home a/v pc. It runs really well under Win2k, but for linux there's no X DRI driver, and the mpeg2 decoder hardware is inaccessible (and VIA won't release specs to OSS devs).

    VIA's linux support for this thing sucks *seriously*. They have binary only drivers that don't work, and don't respond to open-source developers (even VIA's own forums are filled with people who complain about not receiving any reply to linux requests).

    Alan Cox has made comments in the past referring to the strangeness of VIA: (paraphrase from memory) "any vendor that doesn't push chip specs at O/S developers is strange in my book". This doesn't stop with the O/S.

    They're protecting the internals of this thing hard, and they're isolating the free O/S userbase in the process.

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